Top 80 Words That Rhyme with Agreed (With Meanings)

This post contains our favorite combination of "perfect rhymes" and "near rhymes". Near rhymes are words you may have to stretch or exaggerate for songwriting and poems.

Welcome to this guide on the best words that rhyme with agreed!

Here you’ll find the top 80 words and phrases for rhyming the word ‘agreed’ .

Pretty cool huh?

Let’s get started…

Words That Rhyme With Agreed

  • Accede – To agree to a demand or request, often used in negotiations and diplomacy.
  • Aniseed – The seed of the anise plant, often used as a flavoring in cooking and baking.
  • Anteed – Put up a sum of money in advance as a guarantee, often used in betting and gambling.
  • Bead – A small, usually round, object with a hole through the center, often used in jewelry and crafts.
  • Bindweed – A climbing plant with funnel-shaped flowers, often considered a weed.
  • Bleed – To lose blood, or to draw blood from a person or animal, often used in medical and veterinary contexts.
  • Breed – To produce offspring, or to raise and train animals for a particular purpose, often used in agriculture and animal husbandry.
  • Cede – To give up or surrender, often used in politics and diplomacy.
  • Ceilidh – A traditional Scottish or Irish social gathering with music and dancing, often used in cultural contexts.
  • Centipede – A long, many-legged arthropod, often found in damp places.
  • Chickenfeed – A small or insignificant amount of money or resources, often used in slang.
  • Concede – To admit or acknowledge, often used in debates and arguments.
  • Cottonseed – The seed of the cotton plant, often used as animal feed or for oil extraction.
  • Crannied – Having small cracks or openings, often used in architecture and construction.
  • Creed – A statement of belief or principles, often used in religious and philosophical contexts.
  • Decreed – Officially ordered or commanded, often used in legal and governmental contexts.
  • Deed – A legal document or action, often used in property and real estate.
  • Disagreed – To have a different opinion or viewpoint, often used in debates and arguments.
  • Emceed – To act as a master of ceremonies or host, often used in entertainment and events.
  • Exceed – To go beyond or surpass, often used in performance and achievement.
  • Feed – To give food to, or to consume food oneself, often used in agriculture and nutrition.
  • Filigreed – Decorated with intricate or delicate patterns, often used in jewelry and architecture.
  • Flambeed – Cooked or served with flaming alcohol, often used in culinary contexts.
  • Freed – Set free or released from confinement or restraint, often used in legal and political contexts.
  • Fricasseed – Cooked in a white sauce with herbs and spices, often used in culinary contexts.
  • Garnisheed – To seize or hold funds as a form of debt collection, often used in legal and financial contexts.
  • Glaceed – Coated or covered with a glossy or shiny layer, often used in culinary and confectionery contexts.
  • Greed – An intense desire for wealth or possessions, often used in moral and ethical discussions.
  • Guaranteed – Promised or assured, often used in sales and marketing.
  • Hayseed – A seed from grasses used as fodder for livestock, often used in agriculture.
  • Heed – To pay attention to or take notice of, often used in advice and warning.
  • Impede – To obstruct or hinder progress or movement, often used in academic and professional contexts.
  • Indeed – Truly, certainly, or in fact, often used to emphasize a statement or opinion.
  • Intercede – To mediate or intervene on behalf of someone else, often used in conflicts and disputes.
  • Jimsonweed – A poisonous plant with hallucinogenic properties, often used in medicine and botany.
  • Keyed – Adjusted or tuned to a particular key, often used in music and sound design.
  • Knead – To work dough or clay with the hands, often used in culinary and artistic contexts.
  • Kneed – Having a particular type of knee, often used in medical and anatomical contexts.
  • Limeade – A sweetened beverage made from lime juice and water, often used in culinary contexts.
  • Locoweed – A plant containing toxic compounds that affect the nervous system, often used in botany and veterinary medicine.
  • Mead – An alcoholic beverage made from fermented honey and water, often used in culinary and cultural contexts.
  • Meed – A reward or compensation for a job or service, often used in medieval and historical contexts.
  • Millipede – A small, many-legged arthropod, often found in damp places.
  • Misdeed – A wrongful or illegal act, often used in legal and moral discussions.
  • Mislead – To give the wrong impression or information, often used in communication and psychology.
  • Misread – To misunderstand or misinterpret, often used in reading and comprehension.
  • Monkeyed – Behaved in a mischievous or playful way, often used in storytelling and humor.
  • Need – A requirement or necessity, often used in discussions of basic human needs.
  • Orangeade – A sweetened beverage made from orange juice and water, often used in culinary contexts.
  • Overfeed – To give someone or something too much food, often used in animal husbandry and child-rearing contexts.
  • Pedigreed – Having a documented or verified lineage, often used in discussions of animal breeding and genetics.
  • Peed – Urinated, often used in informal and slang contexts.
  • Plead – To make an appeal or request, often used in legal and ethical contexts.
  • Precede – To come before in time, order, or importance, often used in academic and historical contexts.
  • Proceed – To move forward or continue, often used in business and financial contexts.
  • Pureed – Food that has been blended or mashed into a smooth consistency, often used in culinary contexts.
  • Recede – To move back or withdraw, often used in descriptions of tides and hairlines.
  • Reed – A tall, slender grass-like plant with hollow stems, often used in musical instruments.
  • Refereed – Judged or officiated by a referee or umpire, often used in sports contexts.
  • Reread – To read again, often used in literary and educational contexts.
  • Reseed – To plant again or replant, often used in agricultural and gardening contexts.
  • Screed – A long, narrow piece of writing or speech, often used in literary and political contexts.
  • Secede – To withdraw or break away from a larger group or organization, often used in political and historical contexts.
  • Seed – The small, fertilized unit of reproduction in plants, often used in agricultural and botanical contexts.
  • Shinnied – Climbed up or down by using a rope or ladder, often used in adventure and exploration contexts.
  • Skied – Moved on skis or participated in skiing, often used in recreational and sporting contexts.
  • Speed – The rate of motion or action, often used in discussions of physics and transportation.
  • Stampede – A sudden, frenzied rush of a group of animals or people, often used in descriptions of wild animals and crowds.
  • Steed – A horse used for riding, often used in equestrian and literary contexts.
  • Succeed – To achieve or accomplish a desired goal, often used in discussions of success and achievement.
  • Supersede – To replace or overtake something or someone, often used in legal and technical contexts.
  • Swede – A type of root vegetable, often used in culinary and agricultural contexts.
  • Teed – To place a golf ball on a small peg called a “tee,” often used to begin a hole in the game of golf.
  • Togaed – Dressed in a toga, a garment worn in ancient Rome that draped over the body and was often made of wool.
  • Treed – To climb or take refuge in a tree, often used to describe an animal or person who is stuck or trapped.
  • Tweed – A rough, woolen fabric often used for jackets, coats, or other clothing items.
  • Underfeed – To provide insufficient food or nourishment, often referring to livestock or animals.
  • Velocipede – An early type of bicycle with pedals and cranks, often made of wood or metal and propelled by pushing with the feet.
  • Weed – A plant considered undesirable or unwanted, often growing in places where it is not wanted or causing harm to other plants.
  • Whinnied – The sound made by a horse, often used to describe a high-pitched neigh or whinny.

 



Written by Gabriel Cruz - Foodie, Animal Lover, Slang & Language Enthusiast